Yoshio Kodaira
Yoshio Kodaira | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 5 October 1949 Miyagi Prison, Sendai, Occupied Japan | (aged 44)
Cause of death | Execution by hanging |
Criminal status | Executed |
Conviction(s) | Murder (8 counts) |
Criminal penalty | Death |
Details | |
Victims | 8 |
Span of crimes | 2 July 1932 – 6 August 1946 (confessed to at least one additional murder in China in the 1920s) |
Country | Japan and possibly China |
State(s) | Tochigi, Tokyo |
Date apprehended | 20 August 1946 |
Yoshio Kodaira (小平 義雄, Kodaira Yoshio, 28 January 1905 – 5 October 1949) was a Japanese serial killer, serial rapist, and war criminal who murdered at least 8 people in the Tokyo and Tochigi Prefecture areas between 1932 and 1946.
Kodaira killed his father-in-law in 1932 and later raped and murdered at least 7 women between 1945 and 1946 by inviting them into forested areas around Tochigi and Tokyo under the guise of giving them food or employment. Kodaira was sentenced to death after being convicted of killing the seven women and executed in 1949. Kodaira is suspected to have killed other people in Japan, and confessed to committing war crimes in China in the 1920s. However, the exact number of his victims is unknown.
Early life
[edit]Yoshio Kodaira was born on 28 January 1905 in Tochigi, Tochigi Prefecture, and suffered from stuttering during his childhood. In 1923, at the age of 18, Kodaira joined the Imperial Japanese Navy and was assigned to a marine regiment stationed in Yokosuka. In 1928, Kodaira was stationed in China and participated in the Jinan incident, where he personally killed six Chinese soldiers. Reportedly, Kodaira raped many women in China and, in one instance at the Taku Forts, stuck a sword into the belly of a pregnant woman.[1]
First murder and trial
[edit]In 1932, Kodaira retired from the military with the rank of sergeant and married shortly after he returned to Japan. However, his wife eventually left him because he had a child by another woman. On 2 July 1932, Kodaira attacked his wife's family in a rage, killing his father-in-law and injuring six others with an iron rod. Kodaira was arrested and sentenced to 15 years imprisonment, but was released on parole in 1940.
Seven murders and trial
[edit]Kodaira is believed to have raped and murdered 10 women in Tochigi and Tokyo between 25 May 1945 and 6 August 1946. Kodaira was living in Tokyo at the time of the Surrender of Japan in August 1945, and used the post-war situation to exploit vulnerable women for his benefit.
On 25 May 1945, Kodaira raped and killed a 21-year-old after invading a female dormitory at the Navy Clothing Factory where she was working. In June, Kodaira raped and strangled to death a 31-year-old woman near Shin-Tochigi Station, then stole her watch and money. On 12 July, Kodaira invited a 22-year-old woman at Shibuya Station into the woods to work for a farmer, but then murdered her and stole her money. On 15 July, Kodaira invited a 21-year-old woman at Ikebukuro Station to a farmhouse in the woods where she was raped and strangled to death before stealing her money and geta. On 28 September, Kodaira invited a 21-year-old woman at Tokyo Station to the woods where he raped and strangled her to death before stealing her money and clothes. On 29 December, Kodaira invited a 21-year-old woman at Asakusa Station to work for a farmer in a mountain village in Tochigi Prefecture, where Kodaira eventually raped and strangled her to death and stole her money. On 6 August 1946, Kodaira murdered a 17-year-old girl that he had been recruiting for a job since mid-June, visiting her home and meeting her mother. Police searched for Kodaira after the girl's body was discovered on 17 August, when her parents reported his name to the police.
Trial and execution
[edit]Kodaira was arrested on 20 August and denied responsibility for three of the murders in court. On 18 June 1947, the district court tried him for seven of his suspected 10 murders. One of the victims was never identified, and after the fifth murder, Kodaira is known to have committed necrophilia with the corpse. The Supreme Court sentenced Kodaira to death on 16 November 1948.
Kodaira was executed on 5 October 1949 at Miyagi Prison in Sendai. On his final day, Kodaira said "I am fortunate to be able to die on such a calm and peaceful day."[2]
Media
[edit]The third segment of Love and Crime, a 1969 anthology film directed by Teruo Ishii, is about Kodaira.
Based on his case, David Peace published the novel Tokyo Year Zero in 2007.[3]
See also
[edit]- Nanjing Massacre
- Kiyoshi Ōkubo
- Paul Ogorzow
- Sataro Fukiage
- List of serial killers by country
- List of serial killers by number of victims
References
[edit]- ^ 小平義雄連続殺人事件 (in Japanese). 無限回廊. Archived from the original on 19 November 2007. Retrieved 15 November 2007.
- ^ "Peace, It's Wonderful". Time. 17 October 1949. Archived from the original on 30 October 2009. Retrieved 9 February 2008.
- ^ Steve Finbow (12 August 2007). "A dark dissection of Tokyo at war". The Japan Times. Retrieved 12 November 2007.
External links
[edit]- Weekend Beat: Tokyo writer returns to the scene of the crime Asahi Shimbun[dead link ], 22 December 2007
- (in Japanese) Yoshio Kodaira serial murders case
- 1905 births
- 1949 deaths
- 20th-century executions by Japan
- Executed Japanese serial killers
- Imperial Japanese Navy personnel
- Japanese murderers of children
- Japanese people convicted of murder
- Japanese rapists
- Japanese war crimes in China
- Japanese war criminals
- Necrophiles
- People convicted of murder by Japan
- People executed by Japan by hanging
- People from Tochigi Prefecture
- Violence against women in Japan